You were born to teach people. I love how you speak. well done. more please
@oliverdixoncider4 жыл бұрын
"and then open your umbrella" welp, I'm dead now hahahahah
@zettkusanagi6322
3 жыл бұрын
that made my day !!!! literally LoL
@robinbrowne541911 ай бұрын
Yup. You are right that they are exactly the same but completely different. When I was in college I understood capacitors but not inductors, so I asked the instructor about it. He said "Well. What do you think a capacitor is?" So I said "A rechargeable voltage source". So he said "Then an inductor is a rechargeable current source". It all made sense after that. (Except for calculus with complex numbers. Lol.) Cheers from Canada :-)
@GalenMatson4 жыл бұрын
I found this explanation to be within tolerances.
@zettkusanagi6322
3 жыл бұрын
I found your reply "good enough"
@edinfific2576
2 жыл бұрын
I find your lack of precision disturbing (the stability of the circuit).
@GalenMatson
2 жыл бұрын
@@edinfific2576 Your desired precision is up to standard.
@k.r.f.j.b.8144
2 жыл бұрын
@@GalenMatson I too have only positive and no negative views to charge this way of teaching with, and that’s saying a lot since my capacitance for learning is well under spec
@sweetjetsband2 жыл бұрын
Love the straight forward explanations in your videos. Something about the way you explain them makes it seem like you're actually just trying to convey to me a concept over beers at the pub rather than in some heady, academic way. You know your stuff and you make it really interesting and easy to grasp! Thanks and keep it up!
@rainthstrive4 жыл бұрын
The Data poster makes me trust you 100%
@ebarbie5016 Жыл бұрын
Lent's law has nothing to do with back EMF, but rather it's related to forward/front EMF. Trying to stop or decrease the current (or magnetic field) of an inductor will cause forward/front EMF that will make sure the current (magnetic field) remains continues. back EMF is actually a result of Farady's law.
@anastaciamcglinchey4 ай бұрын
I laughed so hard when he made that joke open your umbrella.
@eightequalsequalsdee
3 ай бұрын
Please asplain it
@YOUTUBYAC4 жыл бұрын
Symbol of inductance is L honoring physicist Heinrich Lenz. Your explanation about the magnetic field opossing changes in current... that is Lenz's law. :-)
@simplyput2796
4 жыл бұрын
Because I'm learning on my own instead of at university, I'm kind of coming at everything backwards, so it's a little weird but fun still!
@xkupi Жыл бұрын
The freaking hole in your headphones made me laugh lol.
@SouravTechLabs3 ай бұрын
7:56 - A fellow chubbyemu viewer 🤪🤪😂😂 16:31 - To all the mathematicians, 1+e ^ (iπ) Nice video as usual BTW 😇
@lukego3 жыл бұрын
This was a great video. I've been watching lots of presentations about decoupling capacitors and seeing the reactance by frequency graphs and so on but this video gives me a much more intuitive model to digest. Many thanks!
@x3mfck3 жыл бұрын
I like your humor , and your explainations are detailed enough for any one to get a general idea on the function of both of these "sometimes" confusing components ... Thank you ...
@ricardomardi3 жыл бұрын
Your passion for education shines through, thanks for the great work. Very informative & very well illustrated.
@RenzoTap3 жыл бұрын
One of the bests explanation I've ever see about both devices. Congrats and thanks
@billfrug Жыл бұрын
Wish you were still doing videos. Very clear.
@adrianvonino25742 жыл бұрын
Genius man, just brilliant. Exactly what i needed. Thanks
@lucas_t14433 жыл бұрын
you the man ! My three hour lecture into half hour lecture Thank you!!
@user-lh1vc9kk4e3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for explaining all these so clear. I am going to save this video right away.
@Flyrip2 жыл бұрын
Learning and laughing at the same time when watching your videos. You're awesome :)
@davidharper42893 жыл бұрын
I do not know why you do not have a Zillion subscribers. Your vid's are fantastic. Concise and so on topic. Thank you............you have become my goto in this fantastic field of engineering. Dave from "Downunder"
@Tyler75D Жыл бұрын
A bit late to the party here, but I like your videos! Very interesting and informative, and straight to the point! Exactly what I was looking for :)
@vair56662 жыл бұрын
wow. this is an excellent video. Great work! I like your humour and examples that you use to explain complex things. your videos motivate me to learn more.. you are patient enough to edit videos!
@wm437 Жыл бұрын
Excellent teacher. Thank you for taking of your time to explain this to us.👍🏼
@SkibidiWaPaPaPaPa Жыл бұрын
You have amazing skill at explaining complex concepts in a simple way. Thank you!
@jamescousin71063 ай бұрын
You have got the ball rolling, thanks dude
@aaronregan5061 Жыл бұрын
Dude, I just found out about you. You are the man.!!! love your explanations of things
@ernyo76842 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your presentation. You have a gift for teaching. Remain blessed.
@northgork3 жыл бұрын
@Simply Put. Just joined your excellent channel. Being able to explain this in laymen's terms like you do it is just pure genius. Most academics cannot teach but you certainly can. I am sure many EE grads do not have the depth of understanding that you have too. By the way Eugene Khutoryansky (a physics prof.) has a video that explains capacitors really well. Well worth a watch if you have not seen it yet. Basically as the electrons build up on one of the plates they repel the electrons on the opposite the plate thereby creating a current flow. Anyway, love your insights. Thank you.
@saidbaci4344 Жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation about the basics of capacitors and inductors mechanisms. Well done.
@obli89842 жыл бұрын
this is fucking awesome men I have been searching for this on youtube for more than a year
@natesgarage3 жыл бұрын
Amazing! Thanks for the comparison - mind blown
@tonybp4 жыл бұрын
Excellent video. And you're so right, I definitely had an easier time understanding capacitors as opposed to inductors, it was a pain for me to grasp inductors with the counter EMF and expanding and contracting magnetic fields, and polarity changes and this and that... ugh. Anyway, love your videos, this was a great refresher for me.
@Fenrirsulfre Жыл бұрын
You put it really simply. Well done!
@LuukP208 ай бұрын
I was looking at a buck converter circuit and trying to figure out the role of the inductor and the capacitor right after the switch, but I found myself unable to tell what exactly the difference in function was of the inductor and a capacitor. So I looked for a video explaining the two. I do not understand 100% of what you just explained but things make so much more sense now. I am saving this and probably going to rewatch it over and over again, having it make more sense everytime I watch it. Very good video. Thank you for making it and taking the time to teach other people your wisdom.
@mylgphoneelgee1623 жыл бұрын
Wow great job explaining ive tried to understand these things more than once but your video just helped me mind grasp the theory so much better. Thanks . this is the second video on this channel ive seen and. Theyre both great
@philipgiacalone5605 Жыл бұрын
Great video, thank you. Keep up the terrific work!
@vincerussel13823 жыл бұрын
Definitely well explained! Thanks.
@dougitman5579 Жыл бұрын
Thanks, well said. Excellent analogy
@MrBobo646 ай бұрын
lol, the energy has transferred into your face. Relating it to inertia was a great analogy. Thanks!
@danieljohnson8437 Жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation. Thank you.
@funkbungus1372 жыл бұрын
i just found your channel and this is the first video of yours I've watched, but I lost my fuckin shit when you turned your head to reveal your modded out headphones lol, I want a set, but I am not very skilled at audiophile level stuff like that. serious note though, You're a good teacher, I've had a hard time wrapping my bean around inductors, this made it click, thankyou!
@abdulazizbinsaleh47304 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your amazing video. Just imagine voltage applied immediately while current needs time to flow. I understand it this way since college days 😅
@parapos4 жыл бұрын
great explanation,thank you.
@Ahmadnaweed7863 жыл бұрын
Such a video didn't really existed until now and a lot of people working with electronics don't know these. Well done! I just wish if you said something about saturation.
@WUHAHAYOUSUCK4 жыл бұрын
great video. p.s. i like your headphones
@allexandruprroca67134 жыл бұрын
THAK FOR SHARING YOUR KNOWLEDGE !!! I AM SO HAPPY THAT I FOUND YOU !
@LousyPainter4 жыл бұрын
I just watched this video again. Awsome! One of my sons refured you as the Math Viking. All hail the Math Viking. Great vid my friend!
@simplyput2796
4 жыл бұрын
One of my viewers made this. Seems appropriate. i.imgur.com/24dgbgn.gif
@LousyPainter
4 жыл бұрын
@@simplyput2796 One of my instructors would discribe the inner workings of some chips as science because explaining how they worked was a little to hard to understand for some people.
@philatco103 жыл бұрын
amazing thanks......you explain things in the way my brain works!
@anilshemade60482 жыл бұрын
Feeling lucky to find this channel...simply put!
@GroverCricketDaisy8 ай бұрын
Thanks and good on you I like the way you explain this stuff
@Impulse_Photography7 ай бұрын
I saw this inductor current on the O'scope when I built a telegraph. Once I would hit the key, and release the Code Key, there would be a momentary Strong Spike "A Spark ' produced by the coil in the ' Clapper' I had to install a Diode to prevent burning of the points in the code key from this spike. It's a nice basic experiment with Coils and Back Current ...
@rameshb5573 Жыл бұрын
It was excellent. I felt like sitting in front of u in class room
@Ringer19823 жыл бұрын
Awesome! That was really interesting and also made me laugh. I'm going to make a battery power supply for a tube amp and researching the topic. To understand wtf I'm doing and also get a clean DC.
@howardthegasman Жыл бұрын
Excellent. Great teaching
@justthinkalittle89134 жыл бұрын
Dude! Great video. I hope you keep making them you're great. If you ever want contint ideas I have some.
@dinnade9338 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this video.... This is superb ... Please continue ... I hope U are doing well. Be happy ..may all Be happy
@henrybartlett19863 жыл бұрын
Brilliant!
@V2Guerrero3 жыл бұрын
Cool man, much appreciated.
@qasimpakistan3 жыл бұрын
Underrated channel!
@TBL_stevennelson4 жыл бұрын
I think I get it. Great video. I think the hardest part is remembering all the terms
@stevrgrs Жыл бұрын
You're completely disregarding the Miley coefficient in the force of the wrecking ball :P
@stspringer20033 жыл бұрын
Very articulate, you are good
@factorsistemas53962 жыл бұрын
You,Sir, are amazing
@geoffreyraleigh16742 жыл бұрын
You got the gift. Cheers!
@robinbrowne541911 ай бұрын
Good vid 👍 You got a new subscriber.
@g.d.80653 жыл бұрын
One way to think of capacitors in series (conceptually) is to add up the gaps within each one. Capacitance is inversely proportional to distance, therefore distance is inversely proportional to capacitance, so you add up the inverses of each capacitor to get the sum of the distances, and then take the inverse of the result to get the total capacitance. (Capacitance is also directly proportional to plate surface area, but it works out anyway. You could probably think of the surface area simply being distributed across the plates, but I'm not sure). While I did come up with the intuition for the formula myself, the actual conceptualization of adding distances is taken from one of Eugene Khutoryansky's videos (which I highly recommend). Parallel inductors can be thought of as being akin to resistors with values that decrease over time. Therefore, the formula for resistors in parallel also works in this context (adding up the currents flowing through each and then taking the inverse to get the effective inductance. Two identical inductors in parallel have the same current as a single inductor with half the inductance).
@KabirSarkar1433 жыл бұрын
You are such a passionate teacher
@sangachidam32192 жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation thank u
@trealwilliams15632 жыл бұрын
Funny and informative 😄 👍🏽
@SlimShady.19904 жыл бұрын
My man!
@skriptico3 жыл бұрын
Grande maestro!
@radar5362 жыл бұрын
The Wizard of the electron.
@trealwilliams15632 жыл бұрын
Good shyit man👍🏽
@habtamusium86462 жыл бұрын
i understand some in theory but i am kin to know more in practice , thanks a lot!
@NnaemekaAmamasi Жыл бұрын
you are awesome...!
@gcg9056 Жыл бұрын
Dude! this is so good I feel guilty for getting it free.
@raymondgarafano86043 жыл бұрын
very well put, how u compare physics is great, the wrecking ball hangs str8 down. pushed forward with a truck and held, the power that the truck needed to push the ball will be stored in the ball, when the ball is allowed to swing back, it will have a lot of inertia, same with magnetic field around primary of ignition coil, points open and the flux bilt up now collapses back into primary coil, that is why a condenser is across the points making a tank circuit, absorbing the back volts an keeping the points from burning out.
@mars0a2 жыл бұрын
I was about to pull my hair out reading this book. Thank you you saved my long hair.
@GenesisSoon2 жыл бұрын
wonderful lesson
@jayjwin11782 жыл бұрын
You explain well.
@trealwilliams15632 жыл бұрын
Simple Genius 🖖👍🏽👍🏽
@mhhstudio11054 жыл бұрын
awesome videonand cool guy. love your video
@ziizxtech63643 жыл бұрын
Very simply put
@HomeMadeBoards10 ай бұрын
The L for inductance is for the voltage being out of phase by 90 degrees - represented as an 'L' formation of a node.
@gmradigital2 жыл бұрын
Good video
@josepeixoto33843 ай бұрын
I think i got it, you are good, excellent explanationS; it sounds like you know more beyond that too, maybe A LOT more? And i have another question; your hair and beard, are they in series or in parallel,difficult to tell from here.. lol, thanks,man
@obli89842 жыл бұрын
please make a video of back e.m.f of the indutor and how things wrapped up with motor windings along with inductance
@tomswift2x6 ай бұрын
Where are you. Come back. I love your videos.
@amitkhulbe2 жыл бұрын
Just as much its needed
@sylwesterirla9246 Жыл бұрын
thanks
@raymondgarafano86043 жыл бұрын
YUP, The Leyden jar was the first capacitor a large bottle with tin foil on in and outside with a chain of brass to touch the inner layer. Ben Franklin got across a battery of Leyden jars that were well charged, said it was like stickin a hot branding iron into a keg of gunpowder.
@L0j1k3 жыл бұрын
Damn man where did you get a life-sized poster of Commander Data. I'm sure I posted this comment before but still.
@anirudhr47102 жыл бұрын
hagrid in the field of physics
@raymondgarafano86043 жыл бұрын
Hello Simply put, I'vebeen messing with primary of microwave xformer modified to be an electro-magnet, there is a real bit of an arc when disconnected from a storage battery, is a condenser across the points of ignition coil a tank circuit? Very interesting, as I get it, less current thru and inductance, say field of traction motor, less current thru it, lass back voltage.
@waterfuel Жыл бұрын
Back in 2008 , there was a circuit I read about that added 100v to the existing circuit that was going forward as pulse on/off 40V DC about 6amps. There was no capacitor. The part added was a sealed 60cycles AC relay in vacuum with dual inductors 1.6Millihenry each, of .6ohm. Diode in front of 1st coil L in series with internal diode in between L coils then that 2nd coil L in series with another output diode. Did this arrangement just happen to be lucky and obtain the needed extra 100volts forward? Back EMF forced forward as flyback voltage put to use? I have many inductors to practice with and I need to get just voltage to superimpose on to circuit line. 100v or a miniature autotransformer.
@oraloni1681 Жыл бұрын
The Force
@alistairmurray626 Жыл бұрын
When you said that inductors can be thought of as the reciprocal of capacitors it made me wonder if you could use inductors to filter signals like how capacitors are usually used.
@jboy4real Жыл бұрын
How can you drive mosfets or transistor with sine wave signal with the load supply from a battery source
Пікірлер: 153
Inductors are like a flywheel for current
You were born to teach people. I love how you speak. well done. more please
"and then open your umbrella" welp, I'm dead now hahahahah
@zettkusanagi6322
3 жыл бұрын
that made my day !!!! literally LoL
Yup. You are right that they are exactly the same but completely different. When I was in college I understood capacitors but not inductors, so I asked the instructor about it. He said "Well. What do you think a capacitor is?" So I said "A rechargeable voltage source". So he said "Then an inductor is a rechargeable current source". It all made sense after that. (Except for calculus with complex numbers. Lol.) Cheers from Canada :-)
I found this explanation to be within tolerances.
@zettkusanagi6322
3 жыл бұрын
I found your reply "good enough"
@edinfific2576
2 жыл бұрын
I find your lack of precision disturbing (the stability of the circuit).
@GalenMatson
2 жыл бұрын
@@edinfific2576 Your desired precision is up to standard.
@k.r.f.j.b.8144
2 жыл бұрын
@@GalenMatson I too have only positive and no negative views to charge this way of teaching with, and that’s saying a lot since my capacitance for learning is well under spec
Love the straight forward explanations in your videos. Something about the way you explain them makes it seem like you're actually just trying to convey to me a concept over beers at the pub rather than in some heady, academic way. You know your stuff and you make it really interesting and easy to grasp! Thanks and keep it up!
The Data poster makes me trust you 100%
Lent's law has nothing to do with back EMF, but rather it's related to forward/front EMF. Trying to stop or decrease the current (or magnetic field) of an inductor will cause forward/front EMF that will make sure the current (magnetic field) remains continues. back EMF is actually a result of Farady's law.
I laughed so hard when he made that joke open your umbrella.
@eightequalsequalsdee
3 ай бұрын
Please asplain it
Symbol of inductance is L honoring physicist Heinrich Lenz. Your explanation about the magnetic field opossing changes in current... that is Lenz's law. :-)
@simplyput2796
4 жыл бұрын
Because I'm learning on my own instead of at university, I'm kind of coming at everything backwards, so it's a little weird but fun still!
The freaking hole in your headphones made me laugh lol.
7:56 - A fellow chubbyemu viewer 🤪🤪😂😂 16:31 - To all the mathematicians, 1+e ^ (iπ) Nice video as usual BTW 😇
This was a great video. I've been watching lots of presentations about decoupling capacitors and seeing the reactance by frequency graphs and so on but this video gives me a much more intuitive model to digest. Many thanks!
I like your humor , and your explainations are detailed enough for any one to get a general idea on the function of both of these "sometimes" confusing components ... Thank you ...
Your passion for education shines through, thanks for the great work. Very informative & very well illustrated.
One of the bests explanation I've ever see about both devices. Congrats and thanks
Wish you were still doing videos. Very clear.
Genius man, just brilliant. Exactly what i needed. Thanks
you the man ! My three hour lecture into half hour lecture Thank you!!
Thank you so much for explaining all these so clear. I am going to save this video right away.
Learning and laughing at the same time when watching your videos. You're awesome :)
I do not know why you do not have a Zillion subscribers. Your vid's are fantastic. Concise and so on topic. Thank you............you have become my goto in this fantastic field of engineering. Dave from "Downunder"
A bit late to the party here, but I like your videos! Very interesting and informative, and straight to the point! Exactly what I was looking for :)
wow. this is an excellent video. Great work! I like your humour and examples that you use to explain complex things. your videos motivate me to learn more.. you are patient enough to edit videos!
Excellent teacher. Thank you for taking of your time to explain this to us.👍🏼
You have amazing skill at explaining complex concepts in a simple way. Thank you!
You have got the ball rolling, thanks dude
Dude, I just found out about you. You are the man.!!! love your explanations of things
Thanks for your presentation. You have a gift for teaching. Remain blessed.
@Simply Put. Just joined your excellent channel. Being able to explain this in laymen's terms like you do it is just pure genius. Most academics cannot teach but you certainly can. I am sure many EE grads do not have the depth of understanding that you have too. By the way Eugene Khutoryansky (a physics prof.) has a video that explains capacitors really well. Well worth a watch if you have not seen it yet. Basically as the electrons build up on one of the plates they repel the electrons on the opposite the plate thereby creating a current flow. Anyway, love your insights. Thank you.
Excellent explanation about the basics of capacitors and inductors mechanisms. Well done.
this is fucking awesome men I have been searching for this on youtube for more than a year
Amazing! Thanks for the comparison - mind blown
Excellent video. And you're so right, I definitely had an easier time understanding capacitors as opposed to inductors, it was a pain for me to grasp inductors with the counter EMF and expanding and contracting magnetic fields, and polarity changes and this and that... ugh. Anyway, love your videos, this was a great refresher for me.
You put it really simply. Well done!
I was looking at a buck converter circuit and trying to figure out the role of the inductor and the capacitor right after the switch, but I found myself unable to tell what exactly the difference in function was of the inductor and a capacitor. So I looked for a video explaining the two. I do not understand 100% of what you just explained but things make so much more sense now. I am saving this and probably going to rewatch it over and over again, having it make more sense everytime I watch it. Very good video. Thank you for making it and taking the time to teach other people your wisdom.
Wow great job explaining ive tried to understand these things more than once but your video just helped me mind grasp the theory so much better. Thanks . this is the second video on this channel ive seen and. Theyre both great
Great video, thank you. Keep up the terrific work!
Definitely well explained! Thanks.
Thanks, well said. Excellent analogy
lol, the energy has transferred into your face. Relating it to inertia was a great analogy. Thanks!
Excellent explanation. Thank you.
i just found your channel and this is the first video of yours I've watched, but I lost my fuckin shit when you turned your head to reveal your modded out headphones lol, I want a set, but I am not very skilled at audiophile level stuff like that. serious note though, You're a good teacher, I've had a hard time wrapping my bean around inductors, this made it click, thankyou!
Thanks for your amazing video. Just imagine voltage applied immediately while current needs time to flow. I understand it this way since college days 😅
great explanation,thank you.
Such a video didn't really existed until now and a lot of people working with electronics don't know these. Well done! I just wish if you said something about saturation.
great video. p.s. i like your headphones
THAK FOR SHARING YOUR KNOWLEDGE !!! I AM SO HAPPY THAT I FOUND YOU !
I just watched this video again. Awsome! One of my sons refured you as the Math Viking. All hail the Math Viking. Great vid my friend!
@simplyput2796
4 жыл бұрын
One of my viewers made this. Seems appropriate. i.imgur.com/24dgbgn.gif
@LousyPainter
4 жыл бұрын
@@simplyput2796 One of my instructors would discribe the inner workings of some chips as science because explaining how they worked was a little to hard to understand for some people.
amazing thanks......you explain things in the way my brain works!
Feeling lucky to find this channel...simply put!
Thanks and good on you I like the way you explain this stuff
I saw this inductor current on the O'scope when I built a telegraph. Once I would hit the key, and release the Code Key, there would be a momentary Strong Spike "A Spark ' produced by the coil in the ' Clapper' I had to install a Diode to prevent burning of the points in the code key from this spike. It's a nice basic experiment with Coils and Back Current ...
It was excellent. I felt like sitting in front of u in class room
Awesome! That was really interesting and also made me laugh. I'm going to make a battery power supply for a tube amp and researching the topic. To understand wtf I'm doing and also get a clean DC.
Excellent. Great teaching
Dude! Great video. I hope you keep making them you're great. If you ever want contint ideas I have some.
Thank you so much for this video.... This is superb ... Please continue ... I hope U are doing well. Be happy ..may all Be happy
Brilliant!
Cool man, much appreciated.
Underrated channel!
I think I get it. Great video. I think the hardest part is remembering all the terms
You're completely disregarding the Miley coefficient in the force of the wrecking ball :P
Very articulate, you are good
You,Sir, are amazing
You got the gift. Cheers!
Good vid 👍 You got a new subscriber.
One way to think of capacitors in series (conceptually) is to add up the gaps within each one. Capacitance is inversely proportional to distance, therefore distance is inversely proportional to capacitance, so you add up the inverses of each capacitor to get the sum of the distances, and then take the inverse of the result to get the total capacitance. (Capacitance is also directly proportional to plate surface area, but it works out anyway. You could probably think of the surface area simply being distributed across the plates, but I'm not sure). While I did come up with the intuition for the formula myself, the actual conceptualization of adding distances is taken from one of Eugene Khutoryansky's videos (which I highly recommend). Parallel inductors can be thought of as being akin to resistors with values that decrease over time. Therefore, the formula for resistors in parallel also works in this context (adding up the currents flowing through each and then taking the inverse to get the effective inductance. Two identical inductors in parallel have the same current as a single inductor with half the inductance).
You are such a passionate teacher
Excellent explanation thank u
Funny and informative 😄 👍🏽
My man!
Grande maestro!
The Wizard of the electron.
Good shyit man👍🏽
i understand some in theory but i am kin to know more in practice , thanks a lot!
you are awesome...!
Dude! this is so good I feel guilty for getting it free.
very well put, how u compare physics is great, the wrecking ball hangs str8 down. pushed forward with a truck and held, the power that the truck needed to push the ball will be stored in the ball, when the ball is allowed to swing back, it will have a lot of inertia, same with magnetic field around primary of ignition coil, points open and the flux bilt up now collapses back into primary coil, that is why a condenser is across the points making a tank circuit, absorbing the back volts an keeping the points from burning out.
I was about to pull my hair out reading this book. Thank you you saved my long hair.
wonderful lesson
You explain well.
Simple Genius 🖖👍🏽👍🏽
awesome videonand cool guy. love your video
Very simply put
The L for inductance is for the voltage being out of phase by 90 degrees - represented as an 'L' formation of a node.
Good video
I think i got it, you are good, excellent explanationS; it sounds like you know more beyond that too, maybe A LOT more? And i have another question; your hair and beard, are they in series or in parallel,difficult to tell from here.. lol, thanks,man
please make a video of back e.m.f of the indutor and how things wrapped up with motor windings along with inductance
Where are you. Come back. I love your videos.
Just as much its needed
thanks
YUP, The Leyden jar was the first capacitor a large bottle with tin foil on in and outside with a chain of brass to touch the inner layer. Ben Franklin got across a battery of Leyden jars that were well charged, said it was like stickin a hot branding iron into a keg of gunpowder.
Damn man where did you get a life-sized poster of Commander Data. I'm sure I posted this comment before but still.
hagrid in the field of physics
Hello Simply put, I'vebeen messing with primary of microwave xformer modified to be an electro-magnet, there is a real bit of an arc when disconnected from a storage battery, is a condenser across the points of ignition coil a tank circuit? Very interesting, as I get it, less current thru and inductance, say field of traction motor, less current thru it, lass back voltage.
Back in 2008 , there was a circuit I read about that added 100v to the existing circuit that was going forward as pulse on/off 40V DC about 6amps. There was no capacitor. The part added was a sealed 60cycles AC relay in vacuum with dual inductors 1.6Millihenry each, of .6ohm. Diode in front of 1st coil L in series with internal diode in between L coils then that 2nd coil L in series with another output diode. Did this arrangement just happen to be lucky and obtain the needed extra 100volts forward? Back EMF forced forward as flyback voltage put to use? I have many inductors to practice with and I need to get just voltage to superimpose on to circuit line. 100v or a miniature autotransformer.
The Force
When you said that inductors can be thought of as the reciprocal of capacitors it made me wonder if you could use inductors to filter signals like how capacitors are usually used.
How can you drive mosfets or transistor with sine wave signal with the load supply from a battery source